Decarboxylation
of the Catalytic Lysine Residue by
the C5α-Methyl-Substituted Carbapenem NA-1-157 Leads to Potent
Inhibition of the OXA-58 Carbapenemase
posted on 2024-11-27, 11:08authored byMarta Toth, Nichole K. Stewart, Ailiena O. Maggiolo, Pojun Quan, Md Mahbub Kabir Khan, John D. Buynak, Clyde A. Smith, Sergei B. Vakulenko
Antibiotic resistance in bacteria
is a major global health
concern.
The wide spread of carbapenemases, bacterial enzymes that degrade
the last-resort carbapenem antibiotics, is responsible for multidrug
resistance in bacterial pathogens and has further significantly exacerbated
this problem. Acinetobacter baumannii is one of the leading nosocomial pathogens due to the acquisition
and wide dissemination of carbapenem-hydrolyzing class D β-lactamases,
which have dramatically diminished available therapeutic options.
Thus, new antibiotics that are active against multidrug-resistantA. baumannii and carbapenemase inhibitors are urgently
needed. Here we report characterization of the interaction of the
C5α-methyl-substituted carbapenem NA-1-157 with one of the clinically
important class D carbapenemases, OXA-58. Antibiotic susceptibility
testing shows that the compound is more potent than commercial carbapenems
against OXA-58-producingA. baumannii, with a clinically sensitive MIC value of 1 μg/mL. Kinetic
studies demonstrate that NA-1-157 is a very poor substrate of the
enzyme due mainly to a significantly reduced deacylation rate. Mass
spectrometry analysis shows that inhibition of OXA-58 by NA-1-157
proceeds through both the classical acyl-enzyme intermediate and a
reversible covalent species. Time-resolved X-ray crystallographic
studies reveal that upon acylation of the enzyme, the compound causes
progressive decarboxylation of the catalytic lysine residue, thus
severely impairing deacylation. Overall, this study demonstrates that
the carbapenem NA-1-157 is highly resistant to degradation by the
OXA-58 carbapenemase.